Mysterious Bright Light Seen From Las Vegas to Ventura Was Russian Rocket Body: U.S. Strategic Command

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A mysterious bright light seen by witnesses from Las Vegas to Ventura Tuesday evening was a Russian rocket body re-entering the atmosphere, not a meteor as previously thought, according to the U.S. Strategic Command.

KTLA viewer Matt Decker of Oxnard shared this image of an unexplained bright light seen on Dec. 22, 2015.

The light was first reported by dozens of witnesses shortly after 6 p.m. Hours later, around 9:30 p.m., officials said it was a Russian rocket body.

"U.S. Strategic Command's Joint Functional Component Command for Space (JFCC Space), through the Joint Space Operations Center (JSpOC), removed a Russian SL-4 rocket body from the U.S. satellite catalog as a decayed object after it re-entered the atmosphere today over North America (vicinity Arizona)," around 6:08 p.m. PST, said Deputy Public Affairs Officer Julie Ziegenhorn.

Officials could not accurately track the object after its initial contact with the atmosphere because of the damaging effects, Ziegenhorn added. Additional details were not available.

Earlier in the evening, Griffith Observatory Director Ed Krupp said the object was a bright meteor.

“The most likely thing people saw was the super heated column of air produced by a very small piece of interplanetary debris, something the size of a small pebble," he said.

Typically falling debris is natural and from our solar system, but it can also be “Earth stuff,” or debris that was in orbit that came down, Krupp said.

After the bright light streaked across the sky, people lit up social media with videos and theories as to what it could be.

It was described by witnesses online as a flaming streak, a UFO, and a meteor, and Twitter user @Trading2Wealth said there were two smaller lights next to the larger one.

While the event seemed similar to one on Nov. 7, when an unannounced missile-test fired by the U.S. Navy prompted hundreds of people to swarm the Internet after another bright light lit up the sky in Southern California, officials confirmed it was unrelated.KTLA's Nidia Becerra contributed to this report.